A commercial interruption

I have a great cost-saving idea for West Virginia’s public and higher education systems, as well as state government, but please don’t share my great idea with those nice people at the Gates Foundation.

Stop using the Microsoft Office Suite of products and begin using OpenOffice.  Microsoft may provide great education discounts, but OpenOffice is open-source and free and, more importantly, just as good, if not better.  OpenOffice offers complements to Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Access, as well as some other programs, in a single package, and it can convert files to other formats quite easily.

I am embarrassed to admit that I was responsible for a state technology agency for five years and didn’t know about OpenOffice.  I’m making up for lost time.

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Smart Choices ProgramThe not-so-invisible hand of the processed foods marketplace recently created a new food-labeling campaign called “Smart Choices.” The backers of this campaign: some of the nation’s largest processed food manufacturers, including Kraft, Kellogg’s, ConAgra and General Mills.

So what are some Smart Choices?  Cocoa Krispies, Froot Loops, Fudgsicles and Hellman’s Mayonnaise (the real thing, not that light or reduced fat stuff).

Some quotes from a recent New York Times article about Smart Choices:

Eileen T. Kennedy, president of the Smart Choices Board: The program’s criteria were based on government dietary guidelines and widely accepted nutritional standards.

Where?  At the household of Dan and Roseanne Conner?

Ms. Kennedy: Research into consumer behavior showed that, while shoppers wanted more information, they did not want to hear negative messages or feel their choices were being dictated to them.

The researchers never talked to this consumer.  I want a big “hazardous to your health” symbol on all of these foods.  It might cause me to stay in the fresh produce section of my grocery store a little longer.

You’re rushing around, you’re trying to think about healthy eating for your kids and you have a choice between a doughnut and a cereal.  So Froot Loops is the better choice.

And a doughnut is a better choice than rat poison.  Using this tortured logic, isn’t a doughnut also a smart choice?

Celeste Clark, senior vice president for global nutrition for Kellogg’s (oxymoron anyone?):  You cannot judge the nutritional merits of a food product based on one ingredient.

Especially when your product is Froot Loops and 41 percent sugar by weight.

Ms. Clark: Small amounts of sugar added to nutrient-dense foods like breakfast cereals can make them taste better.  That, in theory, will encourage people to eat more of them, which would increase the nutrients in their diet.

“Small amounts” as in 41 percent sugar by weight?  Eating ANYTHING with a “nutrient,” including doughnuts, in larger quantities will increase the nutrients in your diet – and make you a star on “The Fatchelor.”

Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, who resigned from the Board in disgust: You could start out with some sawdust, add calcium or Vitamin A and meet the criteria.

Don’t forget to add a bunch of sugar, Mr. Jacobson.  Note to Self: The Center for Science in the Public Interest website has a nice green (just like the Smart Choices label and those healthy veggies you’ll pass on your way to your grocery store’s Smart Choices aisle) “Donate Now” button.  I think I’ll click it.

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The SEC stooges

I hate to provide the opponents of government with a good argument because I generally believe government to be good, not bad.  I must say, however, that the Security and Exchange Commission’s Inspector General’s report on the failure of multiple SEC investigations to uncover the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme reads like a Three Stooges comedy skit.

After reading the report, you will not want to put government officials in charge of anything – even though there’s really no choice if we’re going to try to protect innocent investors from crimes like Mr. Madoff’s.  Had Madoff investigators done the most basic thing – verifying that allegedly profitable trades actually occurred – the Ponzi scheme would have unraveled years earlier.  But none of the SEC investigators – except one who just ignored the results – did this most basic thing.

I did not have a lot of confidence in the SEC before this report; now I have virtually none.  This country’s financial regulatory system needs a serious overhaul.

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Media 101: Going to war

Ink Stain

A former employer of mine likes to say: “You should never go to war with anyone who buys ink by the barrel.”  Sometimes people don’t take this sage advice or my advice about avoiding a death of a thousand cuts very seriously:

Mylan Inc. files suit again the Post-Gazette.

Mylan is suing the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette over a series of stories concerning alleged drug safety violations at its Morgantown facility.  The article suggests that Mylan’s lawyers are making some fairly novel legal claims because a straightforward case of libel would be so difficult to make.  Lawyers have tried many novel legal theories to get around libel legal standards over the years, generally with little success.

Well, at least the lawyers will get rich.

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NPR ran an interesting story about merit pay for students on Sunday’s Weekend Edition.  The story noted that more school systems are piloting programs that pay students for doing things like reading books, showing up to school and improving test scores.

2009-09-03 Piggy BanksThe story was interesting, not for its discussion of these pilot programs, but rather for its discussion of psychological studies on the impact of extrinsic rewards on student behavior.  According to one expert, psychological research tells us: “any type of ‘extrinsic’ reward, by and large, undermines motivation.”  According to another expert: ”The bigger the reward, the more damage it does.  The more you use cell phones, T-shirts, money or whatever, the more you undermine motivation for becoming engaged and prolific learners.”

Has anyone ever wondered whether the same principle applies to merit pay for teachers?  The bigger the reward, the more you undermine motivation for becoming an engaged and prolific teacher?

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Phone: 304.541.0332
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Email: dct@dctadvisors.com

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